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DRIVING

EXPLAINED: What is Italy’s Telepass and how do you use it?

If you drive in Italy you'll see large yellow 'Telepass' signs at motorway gates, but what are the benefits of using this system?

EXPLAINED: What is Italy's Telepass and how do you use it?
(Photo by ANDREAS SOLARO / AFP)

A car is very often a necessity in Italy, where public transport can be scarce – whether you’re driving to work or visiting medieval hilltop villages.

And if you use Italy’s autostrade or motorways, you’ve no doubt heard about the Telepass system.

It’s not essential to have a Telepass, but it can be a convenient and cheaper way to use Italy’s motorways as well as to pay for parking, plus other transport services like taxis and trains too.

What is a Telepass?

Italy’s motorways are a network of toll roads. How much you pay depends on how much of the motorway you use, calculated by where you enter and exit.

You can take a ticket and pay when you exit the motorway, or you can use a Telepass.

The Telepass is best known as a device that you stick in your vehicle, which lets you pass through motorway tolls without queuing or the need to stop and pay with cash or card.

If you have the device, you can drive to dedicated lanes where the sign is displayed and you’ll see yellow lines and sometimes a yellow ‘T’ on the road. You can drive right through once you hear the beep on the device.

That sound means your entry or exit has been registered and the barrier will lift allowing you to pass through.

 

How do you get a Telepass?

You pay a monthly subscription for the device, starting from around €1 per month – although some plans offer the first six months for free, while the charges you incur while driving will be added to that fee.

Check the Telepass website here for details of current offers and pricing plans. 

You can sign up via the website, or the app, through which you’ll also make payments and keep track of your subscription and expenses.

READ ALSO: How do you dispute a parking ticket in Italy?

Offers available via the app appear to require customers to provide a phone number registered in Italy, France, Germany, the US or the UK.

Once you sign up, the Telepass can be sent out to your home address. You can also choose to pick it up from a Telepass point, located at gas stations around Italy.

If you don’t want to pay monthly, for example if you’re just visiting Italy, there is a pay-as-you-go option too with a one-off activation charge of €10.

Where can you use a Telepass?

As well as for motorway access, you can also use the Telepass for various other things such paying for ferry tickets, parking, and congestion charges such as those in Milan’s ‘Area C’ traffic restricted area.

In car parks and on some street parking, you may see the Telepass function displayed in its usual blue and yellow signage.

If you see this sign, it means you can go towards the barrier, you’ll hear the beep and you can enter the car park. On exiting, the exact time you’ve spent there will be calculated and charged.

A motorway toll showing cash, card and Telepass lanes. Photo by FILIPPO MONTEFORTE / AFP

You may also see them at airports when you go to drop off or pick up passengers – and again, in some of their car parks too.

The same system applies, where your time will be automatically calculated and you can enter and exit without a ticket or paying at a machine.

If you have the Telepass app, you can also use it for everything from paying for car hire and train tickets to paying for fuel or bike sharing schemes.

For a full list of the services, in English, see here.

There is also a European version of the Telepass which can be used similarly in France, Spain and Portugal. There are plans to expand its use to additional European countries in future.

“The Europe device gives you access to the Autostrada in Europa service so you will be able to travel freely by car or motorcycle without barriers or borders,” the official website says.

You can sign up for this service for a €6 activation fee, with usage charged monthly. Find more details about it here.

Are there any alternatives to the Telepass?

The Telepass system has enjoyed its monopoly within Italy for more than 30 years, but just a few weeks ago a rival competitor launched a similar product – Unipol’s ‘UnipolMove’.

It replicates the Telepass function by means of a device – again, a type of small box that you put in your car or on a motorbike.

The UnipolMove allows automatic payment of motorway tolls through dedicated lanes and an ID system that communicates with the barrier, just like the Telepass.

READ ALSO: How visitors to Italy can avoid driving penalties

Paying for the device and charges are currently restricted to Italian IBAN numbers though, so the Telepass currently has wider appeal for international drivers.

Unipol’s packages aren’t yet as diverse as those of the Telepass, as you may expect. There is currently only one type of contract for the UnipolMove, whereas Telepass offers various packages.

The monthly fee is competitive at €1 per month, but at the moment it’s free for the first six months.

This new product also offers other services aside from motorway tolls, such as car parking and congestion charge functions.

For more details on the new UnipolMove, currently only in Italian, see here.

For more information on driving around Italy, visit our travel section for the latest updates.

Member comments

  1. Should also mention the Via Card. It’s a prepaid card that can be used at the tolls and there are usually special lines. It’s not automatic like Telepass, but the lines are often shorter and quicker than the coin lanes. The Via Card lanes also accept regular credit cards, which I’ve use on occasion. You can buy Via Cards at Punto Blue offices that are usually located near entrances to the autostrada and at some tobacco shops.

    More info here:
    https://www.autostrade.it/it/il-pedaggio/viacard

    Yet, if you want a truly Italian experience, use the coin gates during peak traffic time.

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For members

DRIVING

EXPLAINED: How can you lose your driving licence in Italy?

The 'patente di guida' is a key document for anyone who wants the right to drive long-term in Italy. But what are the circumstances under which your Italian driver's licence could be taken away?

EXPLAINED: How can you lose your driving licence in Italy?

If you’ve overcome the hurdles involved in obtaining an Italian driver’s licence or patente di guida, either by passing an Italian driving test or converting your foreign licence, you’ll want to do everything in your power to keep ahold of it.

To make sure of this, it’s important to know which infractions could led to the loss of your licence; but first, we need to differentiate between the different types of sanctions that can be applied under Italian law.

READ ALSO: Step by step: How to swap your UK driving licence for an Italian one

In Italy, you could have your driver’s licence ritirata (confiscated), sospesa (suspended), or revocata (revoked), each of which is applied in different circumstances and triggers different penalties.

A ritiro della patente (immediate licence confiscation) occurs when you’re stopped by a traffic officer who finds some irregularity with your documents or has caught you violating road laws.

If you’re guilty of a fairly minor infraction, such as driving with an expired licence, your licence will be held by the authorities until you renew it.

If, by contrast, you’re found to have violated the Highway Code in some significant way (such as driving while intoxicated or going more than 40km over the maximum speed limit), the ritiro will lead to a temporary suspension.

READ ALSO: The key vocabulary you’ll need for taking your driving test in Italy

A sospensione could last anywhere from 15 days to five years, depending on the severity of the offence – though month-long suspensions are the most common.

The revoca della patente is far more serious than either the ritiro or sospensione, as it typically means you’ve been permanently stripped of your licence.

In most cases, you’ll have to retake the test from scratch, no sooner than two years after losing your licence. You’ll be considered a new driver under the law, subject to heavier restrictions on speed limits and the types of vehicle you can drive.

Here are the circumstances in which your licence could be ritirata, sospesa or revocata.

Il ritiro della patente can happen when:

– You’re caught driving with an expired licence.
– You’re caught driving under the influence.
– You fail to give priority to other vehicles when required to.
– You’re involved in an accident that resulted in injuries.
– You don’t adequately rearrange a precariously-balanced load after the police have told you to.
– You don’t take a roadworthiness test (which might have been ordered either because you’ve lost all of the points on your licence or because there are doubts over your physical, mental, or technical abilities) within the required timeframe.

READ ALSO: Did you know…? Italy can fine you over €3,300 for speeding

La sospensione della patente can happen when:

– As a new driver, you don’t respect the new driver vehicle and speed limits.
– You exceed the speed limit by more than 40 km/h.
– You drive in the emergency lane in violation of the Highway Code.
– You’re caught driving under the influence or refuse to submit to an alcohol/drug test when stopped.
– You’re involved in a hit-and-run.
– You’re caught driving in a vehicle that’s been impounded.
– You’re driving with falsified or counterfeit insurance documents.
– You’ve temporarily lost certain physical or mental faculties.
– You’re driving a vehicle that requires a different kind of licence to the one in your possession.

La revoca della patente can happen when:

– You drive while your licence is suspended.
– You drive the wrong way on a motorway.
– You permanently lose certain physical or mental capacities.
– You don’t meet certain ‘moral requirements‘ (you’ve been convicted of certain crimes related to drug trafficking or are considered a habitual or career criminal).
– Your licence is replaced by one issued by a foreign state.
– You fail a roadworthiness test. 

See more updates and practical guides in The Local’s Italian driving section.

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